Born to be traveling
Sitting in her rocking-chair, Eva was
recalling the past and indulging in sweet memories about her young, wild and
prosperous years. Her husband, Lowe, as everybody knew him, now white-haired
with wrinkled face, was walking to and fro, enjoying the heat of the glowing
charcoals in the hearth. Now having a calm and even a bit sedentary life,
Eva was once a fervent girl, eager for adventures and aspiring for
knowledge. But let’s trace down her life from its beginning.
It was about midnight. The carriage was moving rapidly through the
impermeable mist of the night. The houses along the road were dark and
seemed empty and lifeless. All of a sudden, an unexpected cry echoed in the
surroundings. The pregnant Marie was beginning to give birth to a child. The
young family had hardly passed the boundary between Germany and Russia, when
a new star appeared in the sky – a little girl was born on Russian land but
with German blood flowing through her veins. Her name was Eva – like the
first woman on the Earth. Previously, citizens and inhabitants of Bavaria,
Marie and John could not resist the warm invitation of Catherine the Great
and Alexander the First to settle in south Russia. Offering not only land
but also precious source of subsistence for whole families, Russia was
tempting hundreds of German farmers. Eva’s parents were no exception.
Thus Crimea became a home for many farmer families. Unfortunately, Marie
and John had tough times during their sojourn in south Russia. Germans had
gone to Russia determined to maintain their language, religion and culture.
The reality was hard to bear – they turned out to be an isolated people. Not
having taken any educated Germans like pastors, priests, teachers or traders
– they actually lost all contact with their native land. They were cut off
from the substantial progress that took place in Germany during the 19th
century. Like Marie and John, most of the Germans in South Russia were
farmers. Few had the time, money or inclination to take interest in any
education or literacy. Through this time of adjustment to the unfavorable
conditions in Russia, Eva was growing. With her physical growth was
increasing her interest in education. Eager for knowledge and resolute to
make her dreams come true, Eva had no doubt that she could get what she
wanted. Most people, in this number her parents too, displaying more
interest in religion than in education, lavished far more money on their
churches than they did on their schools. Therefore, even when the first
German-language elementary schools opened gates in the colonies, the people
continued to be more engrossed in farming than in education. Because the
educated people among them, mainly Russian officials, foreign priests,
pastors and traders, abused the Germans, for the immigrants the only thing
they could do was to disgust the educated people, show and feel little
respect for them. That’s why for Eva it was the most troublesome task to
speak with her parents about education. She knew that the only plausible
chance to make them believe in the rightness of her words was to ask not
permission for entering a colony’s school but a general movement to America.
After days of convincing and stipulating, the eleven-year-old girl
finally succeeded in persuading her parents to move to America – the country
where there was nothing impossible, or at least she thought it to be so.
Marie and John, loving their daughter from the bottom of their hearts, were
ready to undertake a new hazardous traveling to the “land of freedom”,
abandoning a settled but humdrum life. Thriving in a constricted society,
Eva was eager to “taste” the education and plunge in the depths of
knowledge. The year was 1910. At this time not only Marie, John and Eva were
executing their plans to move to South Dakota. So were about two thousands
more German-Russians, striving for new horizons. For about four years the
McIntosh County was literally swept over by German-Russians. Numerous
families were passing the boundary with a view to better opportunities.
Marie and John settled themselves in Ashley, McIntosh County, South Dakota
and began constructing a new farm. Meanwhile the dreams of Eva fell through.
German-Russians in North Dakota exhibited almost the same characteristics
they had had in Russia. Eva was one of the few German-Russian children who
completed the 8th grade. Being already 15-year-old, Eva wanted to continue
her education in high school, which was quite unusual and even striking for
her society. Life in America wasn’t such a piece of cake as she had thought
a couple of years ago. German-Russians, like many German-Americans, were
subjected to indignities as kissing the American flag or not being able to
speak the only language they knew – German. Eva soon realized that coming to
America was equal to jumping from the frying pan into the fire. Still, she
didn’t lose hope and continued to strive. Her incessant optimism preserved
her from the despair. Anyway, she did study in a high-school and after she
graduated got acquainted with a young and promising owner, publisher and
editor of both the Ashley Tribune and the Wishek News – all renowned
newspapers with the German-Russian population in McIntosh County. The
energetic entrepreneur – Lowe – momentarily perceived the passion and zeal
for knowledge in Eva. As she had a solid education for those times, he
offered her a job in Ashley Tribune as a journalist. At this moment, the
19-year-old provincial girl realized that this was a miracle – her dream was
becoming true. Lowe had an ambitious goal to spread the newspaper to every
home in the county. Therefore a seasoned and experienced German-speaking
staff was in aid of his endeavors.
Four years later Eva and Lowe got married. The wedding ceremony was
magnificent. Eva’s parents couldn’t stanch their tears of happiness. The
young family continued their progress both personally and professionally.
They made a couple of breakthroughs in the media business and successfully
coped with the situation during the World War First. Now their two grown-up
boys and three girls are building their own families, obtaining essential
experience from their parents. Eva is now a 68-year-old grandma but the
numerous problems and wild moments hadn’t put years on her. She is still
happily married to Lowe, who finally decided to retire from the business and
show the ropes to his posterity.
Sources of information:
“All things decently and in order and other writing on a German from Russia
heritage” by Edna Boardman
“Russian-German settlements in the
United States” by Richard Sallet
“Four generations” by Karen Herzog –
article
“Legacy of three generations” by
Edna Weispfenning